Due to the Township's long status as a rural agricultural
community with the exception of limited in fill development within
the historic villages of Pittstown, Quakertown and Cherryville, all
subdivision activity places new residential development in close proximity
to active farming activities.

Residents who are drawn to the Township because of
its rural environment and agricultural vistas frequently find their
lifestyles to be incompatible with the realities of the farming operations
going on around them.

Residents who lack prior experience in living in a
rural agricultural community also may act in a manner that is damaging
to farm operations through trespassing. They also inadvertently expose
themselves to injury from farm animals, equipment and chemicals.

The State of New Jersey and the County of Hunterdon
have adopted laws, regulations, policies and procedures which are
intended to enhance, promote and preserve the integrity of the rural
agricultural character of the Township.

It is necessary, therefore, to establish mechanisms
by which agricultural uses will be protected. The mechanism of enhanced
buffering and landscape requirements represents a reasonable method
to assure that the long-term development of the Township continues
to honor its agricultural and rural heritage.

All applications for development involving subdivisions of five lots or more or nonagricultural, nonresidential site plan approval shall be required to comply with this section. In addition, any application requiring a detention basin shall comply with § 310-121 of this article. All applicable subdivision or site plans shall include a landscape plan as part of the application. All subject applications shall be referred to the Township's Landscaping Committee, a standing committee of the Land Use Board, for review and recommendations to the reviewing agency.

Inventory of species. Every application for development
subject to this section shall include a written inventory by species,
diameter (at breast height) and number of all trees greater than six
inches diameter (at breast height) in all areas to be disturbed for
infrastructure development (roads, detention basis, septic, utilities,
etc.).

Large trees (greater than six-inch caliper) that are
to be removed or damaged in the development of the property shall
be transplanted or replaced elsewhere on the property with healthy
plants that are included on the desirable trees list. Trees shall
be replaced by trees of similar caliper or may be replaced with a
multiple of smaller caliper trees equaling at least the original tree's
diameter using a plant of minimum two-inch diameter (dbh) stock selected
from the desirable tree list. For example, a tree measuring fifteen-inch
diameter breast height (dbh) may be replaced with eight two-inch caliper
trees or five three-inch caliper trees. Replacement trees must be
in addition to the count required to meet the buffering requirements
as set forth elsewhere in this chapter.

A landscaping buffer shall be at least 100 feet in
width for the front yard and 75 feet in width for side yard buffering
areas. It shall consist of a mix of grass, ground cover, trees and
shrubs. The total buffer shall achieve a screening height of at least
five feet with a November-to-April opacity rating of not less than
60% within five years of installation or two years from project completion,
whichever comes first. The landscape plan shall show a mix of tree
heights and tree groupings in order to improve the natural effect
of the plantings.

Landscaped earth berms shall be used when tree
and plant materials will not effectively screen the view to 60% opacity
November to April. Any land area which lies between the designated
landscape strip or berm and the public right-of-way shall be landscaped
and well maintained with grass or ground cover. Berms and associated
plantings shall be designed to encompass the same area that would
have been required to be landscaped. Berms shall be a minimum of five
feet in height. Each berm should then be landscaped to meet the required
opacity of the ordinance. The berm and landscape area shall be set
back from the road by 25 feet and shall be built to cover the remaining
75 feet of the required 100 feet landscaped buffer as described in
[1] above. The berm shall be naturalized in form, with undulations
and some degree of discontinuities, and not appear as a continuous
mound of dirt.

Agricultural lands. All subject applications for properties adjacent to agricultural lands shall require a landscape buffer adjacent to the agricultural lands as part of the development and landscaping plan. The buffer shall be reviewed by the Landscaping Committee and shall consist of at least the landscape buffer defined in Subsection C(6)(b) of this section, plus, for example, fencing and other materials to discourage entry onto the neighboring agricultural property. The Landscaping Committee shall seek input from the owner(s) of the adjacent agricultural lands as part of its recommendation to the Land Use Board on the appropriateness of the buffering and landscaping plan. If fencing is proposed to discourage entry onto the adjacent agricultural lands, it shall meet the standards of § 220-42D and shall be no less than four feet high. It shall be of such design as to be appropriate for dual agricultural/residential use.

Historic districts. All subject applications for properties adjacent to historic districts shall include a perimeter landscape buffer as part of the development and landscaping plan. The buffer shall be reviewed by the Landscaping Committee and shall meet the standards defined in § 310-118 of this article.

Existing residential properties. All subject applications which are adjacent to existing residential properties shall include a perimeter buffering as part of the development and landscape plan to shield the adjacent property. The buffer shall be reviewed by the Landscape Committee of the Land Use Board and shall meet the standards defined in § 310-118 of this article.

All subject applications shall include a perimeter buffering between each new lot of less than 10 acres to shield the adjacent property as part of the development and landscape plan. The buffer shall be reviewed by the Landscape Committee of the Land Use Board and shall meet the standards defined in § 310-118 of this article.

Existing hedgerows shall be preserved. The applicant
may request a waver to replace in kind, upon submission of an impact
document indicating the positive and negative impacts of removal of
the existing hedgerow. A hedgerow is defined as a physical feature
consisting of plants, trees, soil or rocks or any combination which
serves to define separation between land areas.

Newly formed lots less than 10 acres shall include
interior tree plantings of indigenous tree species at a density of
no less than one tree per 10,000 square feet. This requirement is
exclusive of any tree make-up requirements or perimeter requirements

All subject applications shall include in the landscaping plan a landscaped buffer area along any existing rights-of-way. This buffer shall be reviewed by the Landscaping Committee and meet the standards as set in § 310-118. In addition, as part of this landscape buffer, trees shall be planted along the roadway at the rate of one tree per 50 linear feet of frontage. These trees shall be selected from the list of desirable trees and may show a mix of tree heights and tree groupings in order to improve the natural effect of these plantings.

At least one shade or evergreen tree selected from
the list of desirable trees shall be planted along any new public
right-of-way for every 30 linear feet of the new public right-of-way.
The landscape plan shall show a mix of tree heights and tree groupings
in order to improve the natural effect of these plantings.

Necessary accessways (driveways, etc.) from a public
right-of-way through such landscaped areas shall be permitted, but
such accessways shall not be subtracted from the lineal dimension
used to determine the minimum number of trees required.

Detention basis and similar stormwater management
facilities shall be screened from view from the public right-of-way
using a variety of plant materials selected from the lists of desirable
trees and shrubs. The total buffer shall achieve a screening height
of at least five feet with a November-to-April opacity rating of not
less than 60% within five years of installation or two years from
project completion, whichever comes first.

Any parking area shall provide interior lot landscaping
equivalent to 20% of the impervious area of the parking lot and associated
driveways. The landscaping shall be a mixture of trees, grass and
shrubs. Trees shall be planted at the rate of one tree for every 35
feet of linear feet of landscaped area.

Bare root tree plantings may be used but only if actually
installed prior to final grading of roads. Unless otherwise recommended
by the Landscaping Committee, bare root trees shall be minimum caliper
of 1 1/2 inches.

Balled and burlapped tree plantings may be used. Unless
otherwise recommended by the Landscaping Committee, balled and burlapped
trees shall be two-inch to three-inch caliper at the time of final
approval.

No planting shall be installed unless it has
been subject to proper root and top pruning. Proper timing (bare root
nursery stock must be dormant when planted), proper soil mix (based
on the site and species), proper support and proper maintenance are
required.

The landscaping plan shall designate the person
or entity who shall be responsible for maintaining the plantings in
a health, growing condition. Such maintenance shall include watering,
cultivation and weed control.

All plantings shall be maintained in an attractive
and presentable condition, free of weeds, refuse and debris, and shall
be continuously maintained in a sound health and vigorous growing
condition, free of plant diseases and insects, per the landscaping
plan.

The selection, spacing and sizing of plant materials
shall depend on the use to which the plantings are placed in keeping
with the specifications recommended by the Land Use Board's Landscaping
Committee.

A mixture of plant materials (evergreen and
deciduous trees and shrubs) is required as a protective measure against
disease and insect infestation. The landscaping plan may allow plant
materials to be used together in informal groupings in lieu of meeting
the on-center spacing requirements. However, the plant groupings must
utilize the same number of plantings as required by the ordinance.

For areas that are to be screened, a minimum
November-to-April opacity shall be maintained at 60% and a minimum
May-to-October opacity shall be maintained at 80% within five years
of installation or two years from project completion, whichever comes
first.

The applicant shall submit as a checklist item
for all subject applications a landscape plan to accomplish the intent
of this section as established above. The plan shall be prepared by
a landscape architect. The plan shall be reviewed by the Landscaping
Committee of the Land Use Board, if necessary with the assistance
of a professional landscape architect. The landscape plan shall include:

Proposed topography at a maximum of two-foot
contour intervals, except where the slopes equal or exceed 12% grade,
in which case five-foot contour lines and topography extending 100
feet beyond the site boundary.

Locations of all existing and proposed buildings
or, for subdivisions, building envelopes, easements, parking spaces,
vehicular use areas and public rights-of-way and existing and proposed
overhead and underground utilities, including the locations of hydrants
and storage tanks.

A planting listing for all proposed landscape
materials showing caliper sizes, height of material, method of installation,
botanical and common names, type and amount of mulch, ground cover,
grasses and root type (bare root or balled and burlapped) and quantity
of materials.

The landscaping plan shall be accompanied by
an itemized cost estimate covering all new plantings and mulch shown
on the planting plan. Performance and/or maintenance bonds shall ensure
landscaping installation within the time specified and in accordance
with the landscape plan and shall guarantee the health growth of the
plant material for two years past the date of posting of the maintenance
bond.